To evaluate your user experience, sit down and browse your website as if you were a lead. Is everything where you would want it to be, if you were learning about your company for the first time? Is the navigation clear and easy to follow? If not, plan to make changes right away – or, if you want a second opinion, consider having some user experience testing done to determine where your website’s weaknesses are.

Did you know that 74% of companies that weren’t exceeding revenue goals didn't know their visitor, lead, MQL, or sales opportunities numbers? How about that over 70% of companies not achieving their revenue goals generate fewer than 100 leads per month, and only 5% generate more than 2,500 leads per month? These are just a few examples of what you’ll find in the report.

WebiMax is truly a pleasure to work with. They’ve taken the time to understand our business and have been at the forefront of the industry when it comes to proposing new ideas to grow our account. Their focus on driving sales has helped us achieve and exceed our online targets. Their professionalism and expert knowledge makes them a valuable ally for anybody looking to succeed in paid search advertising. We look forward to a continued, successful partnered future.
At a certain point, the prospect’s online behavior – their Digital Body Language – will indicate that they’re ready to engage with Sales in a discussion about purchasing. Marketers can identify this readiness through lead scoring, which matches the individual’s behavior to activities that are known to indicate buying intent. The resulting conversation with Sales will rest on a foundation of buyer education that has been built in the earlier stages of the lead generation process.
Lead scoring is a way to qualify leads quantitatively. Using this technique, leads are assigned a numerical value (or score) to determine where they fall on the scale from “interested” to “ready for a sale”. The criteria for these actions is completely up to you, but it must be uniform across your marketing and sales department so that everyone is working on the same scale.
Cost per thousand (e.g. CPM Group, Advertising.com), also known as cost per mille (CPM), uses pricing models that charge advertisers for impressions — i.e. the number of times people view an advertisement. Display advertising is commonly sold on a CPM pricing model. The problem with CPM advertising is that advertisers are charged even if the target audience does not click on (or even view) the advertisement.